A theological reframing that positions each person as equally beloved, dissolving the hierarchy implicit in choosing spiritual or relational favorites.
This concept draws directly from Rabia's revolutionary understanding of divine love. In traditional frameworks, certain people become "the Beloved"—the chosen, the favorites of God or community. Rabia's insight was radical: each soul is equally beloved by the Divine. There is no ultimate favorite, no spiritual hierarchy of worth. The Beloved and the Beloved Many names this democratic spirituality as antidote to favoritism's implicit theology. When we treat certain people as more spiritually significant, more deserving of love or resources, we're unconsciously operating from a model where some people matter more than others. This model inevitably enables favoritism. Rabia's teaching reveals that every person's connection to the Sacred is equally profound and precious. This doesn't mean treating everyone identically—it means refusing to create permanent tiers of value. The practice involves meditation on the equal belovedness of all beings: the difficult person and the charismatic one, the visible and the invisible, the powerful and the marginalized. When we genuinely internalize that all are equally beloved, we lose the psychological permission structure that allows favoritism.
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